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Co-evolution of genomes and plasmids within Chlamydia trachomatis and the emergence in Sweden of a new variant strain

Co-evolution of genomes and plasmids within Chlamydia trachomatis and the emergence in Sweden of a new variant strain
Co-evolution of genomes and plasmids within Chlamydia trachomatis and the emergence in Sweden of a new variant strain
Background

Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common cause of sexually transmitted infections globally and the leading cause of preventable blindness in the developing world. There are two biovariants of C. trachomatis: 'trachoma', causing ocular and genital tract infections, and the invasive 'lymphogranuloma venereum' strains. Recently, a new variant of the genital tract C. trachomatis emerged in Sweden. This variant escaped routine diagnostic tests because it carries a plasmid with a deletion. Failure to detect this strain has meant it has spread rapidly across the country provoking a worldwide alert. In addition to being a key diagnostic target, the plasmid has been linked to chlamydial virulence. Analysis of chlamydial plasmids and their cognate chromosomes was undertaken to provide insights into the evolutionary relationship between chromosome and plasmid. This is essential knowledge if the plasmid is to be continued to be relied on as a key diagnostic marker, and for an understanding of the evolution of Chlamydia trachomatis.

Results
The genomes of two new C. trachomatis strains were sequenced, together with plasmids from six C. trachomatis isolates, including the new variant strain from Sweden. The plasmid from the new Swedish variant has a 377 bp deletion in the first predicted coding sequence, abolishing the site used for PCR detection, resulting in negative diagnosis. In addition, the variant plasmid has a 44 bp duplication downstream of the deletion. The region containing the second predicted coding sequence is the most highly conserved region of the plasmids investigated. Phylogenetic analysis of the plasmids and chromosomes are fully congruent. Moreover this analysis also shows that ocular and genital strains diverged from a common C. trachomatis progenitor.

Conclusion
The evolutionary pathways of the chlamydial genome and plasmid imply that inheritance of the plasmid is tightly linked with its cognate chromosome. These data suggest that the plasmid is not a highly mobile genetic element and does not transfer readily between isolates. Comparative analysis of the plasmid sequences has revealed the most conserved regions that should be used to design future plasmid based nucleic acid amplification tests, to avoid diagnostic failures.
1471-2164
Seth-Smith, Helena M.B.
8395d2a5-4c57-45c3-bed3-5e6ee4bcdd5f
Harris, Simon R.
2ea006ac-e51e-406c-bcf2-e97eec896e24
Persson, Kenneth
9ecaea9f-c093-4d57-8bf3-99373ab580c7
Marsh, Pete
28ca4a02-c63e-45bb-8288-52806daad572
Barron, Andrew
3f7207dc-a8a5-43a9-84b9-3e51554efe43
Bignell, Alexandra
721ced4b-0d97-4b55-be8a-55088c6625f5
Bjartling, Carina
b8c0bfea-b7dc-4605-a865-0f1f4d40685b
Clark, Louise
567704a1-3088-45ae-b1f1-860c6e3b4fb7
Cutcliffe, Lesley T.
88f242f4-b4f7-46d4-a1dd-c187dd60a773
Lambden, Paul R.
4fcd536e-2d9a-4366-97c6-386e6b005698
Lennard, Nicola
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Lockey, Sarah J.
22bafcd7-b416-421c-b6ef-bd03773ef1f7
Quail, Michael A.
c4e16a8a-b312-4ae9-9e83-c48250c333a7
Salim, Omar
a8a00604-9e57-4638-8c96-5b37e75fee90
Skilton, Rachel J.
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Wang, Yibing
a4dc0303-7006-411e-9063-c26297fac847
Holland, Martin J.
5c3e39e5-7ac4-40b4-81ab-573347afd8a0
Parkhill, Julian
1f2ed5a1-058d-4bf5-becc-e2a5e8d4002a
Thomson, Nicholas R.
5497a110-069d-4156-bccb-c77db572b1c2
Clarke, I.N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b
Seth-Smith, Helena M.B.
8395d2a5-4c57-45c3-bed3-5e6ee4bcdd5f
Harris, Simon R.
2ea006ac-e51e-406c-bcf2-e97eec896e24
Persson, Kenneth
9ecaea9f-c093-4d57-8bf3-99373ab580c7
Marsh, Pete
28ca4a02-c63e-45bb-8288-52806daad572
Barron, Andrew
3f7207dc-a8a5-43a9-84b9-3e51554efe43
Bignell, Alexandra
721ced4b-0d97-4b55-be8a-55088c6625f5
Bjartling, Carina
b8c0bfea-b7dc-4605-a865-0f1f4d40685b
Clark, Louise
567704a1-3088-45ae-b1f1-860c6e3b4fb7
Cutcliffe, Lesley T.
88f242f4-b4f7-46d4-a1dd-c187dd60a773
Lambden, Paul R.
4fcd536e-2d9a-4366-97c6-386e6b005698
Lennard, Nicola
c130d0ad-6c87-44bb-bdd1-dc897dc230d0
Lockey, Sarah J.
22bafcd7-b416-421c-b6ef-bd03773ef1f7
Quail, Michael A.
c4e16a8a-b312-4ae9-9e83-c48250c333a7
Salim, Omar
a8a00604-9e57-4638-8c96-5b37e75fee90
Skilton, Rachel J.
b02d4f32-609c-4074-b616-ec819b018dbe
Wang, Yibing
a4dc0303-7006-411e-9063-c26297fac847
Holland, Martin J.
5c3e39e5-7ac4-40b4-81ab-573347afd8a0
Parkhill, Julian
1f2ed5a1-058d-4bf5-becc-e2a5e8d4002a
Thomson, Nicholas R.
5497a110-069d-4156-bccb-c77db572b1c2
Clarke, I.N.
ff6c9324-3547-4039-bb2c-10c0b3327a8b

Seth-Smith, Helena M.B., Harris, Simon R., Persson, Kenneth, Marsh, Pete, Barron, Andrew, Bignell, Alexandra, Bjartling, Carina, Clark, Louise, Cutcliffe, Lesley T., Lambden, Paul R., Lennard, Nicola, Lockey, Sarah J., Quail, Michael A., Salim, Omar, Skilton, Rachel J., Wang, Yibing, Holland, Martin J., Parkhill, Julian, Thomson, Nicholas R. and Clarke, I.N. (2009) Co-evolution of genomes and plasmids within Chlamydia trachomatis and the emergence in Sweden of a new variant strain. BMC Genomics, 10 (239). (doi:10.1186/1471-2164-10-239). (PMID:19460133)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Chlamydia trachomatis is the most common cause of sexually transmitted infections globally and the leading cause of preventable blindness in the developing world. There are two biovariants of C. trachomatis: 'trachoma', causing ocular and genital tract infections, and the invasive 'lymphogranuloma venereum' strains. Recently, a new variant of the genital tract C. trachomatis emerged in Sweden. This variant escaped routine diagnostic tests because it carries a plasmid with a deletion. Failure to detect this strain has meant it has spread rapidly across the country provoking a worldwide alert. In addition to being a key diagnostic target, the plasmid has been linked to chlamydial virulence. Analysis of chlamydial plasmids and their cognate chromosomes was undertaken to provide insights into the evolutionary relationship between chromosome and plasmid. This is essential knowledge if the plasmid is to be continued to be relied on as a key diagnostic marker, and for an understanding of the evolution of Chlamydia trachomatis.

Results
The genomes of two new C. trachomatis strains were sequenced, together with plasmids from six C. trachomatis isolates, including the new variant strain from Sweden. The plasmid from the new Swedish variant has a 377 bp deletion in the first predicted coding sequence, abolishing the site used for PCR detection, resulting in negative diagnosis. In addition, the variant plasmid has a 44 bp duplication downstream of the deletion. The region containing the second predicted coding sequence is the most highly conserved region of the plasmids investigated. Phylogenetic analysis of the plasmids and chromosomes are fully congruent. Moreover this analysis also shows that ocular and genital strains diverged from a common C. trachomatis progenitor.

Conclusion
The evolutionary pathways of the chlamydial genome and plasmid imply that inheritance of the plasmid is tightly linked with its cognate chromosome. These data suggest that the plasmid is not a highly mobile genetic element and does not transfer readily between isolates. Comparative analysis of the plasmid sequences has revealed the most conserved regions that should be used to design future plasmid based nucleic acid amplification tests, to avoid diagnostic failures.

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More information

Published date: 21 May 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 72768
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/72768
ISSN: 1471-2164
PURE UUID: be7435f5-0fc1-426a-b311-595d4d9c2432
ORCID for Omar Salim: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2562-4827
ORCID for I.N. Clarke: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4938-1620

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Feb 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:44

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Contributors

Author: Helena M.B. Seth-Smith
Author: Simon R. Harris
Author: Kenneth Persson
Author: Pete Marsh
Author: Andrew Barron
Author: Alexandra Bignell
Author: Carina Bjartling
Author: Louise Clark
Author: Lesley T. Cutcliffe
Author: Paul R. Lambden
Author: Nicola Lennard
Author: Sarah J. Lockey
Author: Michael A. Quail
Author: Omar Salim ORCID iD
Author: Rachel J. Skilton
Author: Yibing Wang
Author: Martin J. Holland
Author: Julian Parkhill
Author: Nicholas R. Thomson
Author: I.N. Clarke ORCID iD

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